It is also possible to use the range function to systematically generate the indices of the characters. The for loop can then be used to iterate over these positions.
These positions can be used together with the indexing operator to access the individual
characters in the string.

Consider the following codelens example.

(ch08_7)

The index positions in “apple” are 0,1,2,3 and 4. This is exactly the same sequence of integers returned by range(5). The first time through the for loop, idx will be 0 and the “a” will be printed. Then, idx will be reassigned to 1 and “p” will be displayed. This will repeat for all the range values up to but not including 5. Since “e” has index 4, this will be exactly right to show all
of the characters.

In order to make the iteration more general, we can use the len function to provide the bound for range. This is a very common pattern for traversing any sequence by position. Make sure you understand why the range function behaves
correctly when using len of the string as its parameter value.

You may also note that iteration by position allows the programmer to control the direction of the
traversal by changing the sequence of index values. Recall that we can create ranges that count down as
well as up so the following code will print the characters from right to left.

(ch08_8)

Trace the values of idx and satisfy yourself that they are correct. In particular, note the start and end of the range.

Check your understanding

strings-11-1: How many times is the letter o printed by the following statements?

s="python rocks"foridxinrange(len(s)):ifidx%2==0:print(s[idx])

(A) 0

The for loop visits each index but the selection only prints some of them.

(B) 1

o is at positions 4 and 8

(C) 2

Yes, it will print all the characters in even index positions and the o character appears both times in an even location.

(D) Error, the for statement cannot have an if inside.

The for statement can have any statements inside, including if as well as for.